were whole baskets full of
precious stones, and though she had seen them only once or twice, she remembered the colors so
clearly. Her eyes had been shocked by the vivid blue of the sapphires and the dense green of the
emeralds and the blood strength of the rubies' red. The aquamarines had been the color of the
sky, so they had fascinated her less.
Her favorites had been the citrines, the lovely yellow citrines. She'd sneaked in a touch of those.
It had been only a quick push of her hand into the basket when no one had been looking, but oh,
how glorious to see the light flicker in their cheerful facets. The feel of them shifting against her
palm had been a lively chatter to her hand's great content, a fanciful, tactile rush made all the
more exciting by its illicit nature.
They had warmed her, though they were in fact no warmer than anything else.
And the gems weren't the only reason that entry to the Treasury was an extraordinary treat. There
were objects from the other side kept there in glass cases, things that had been collected either
because they played a pivotal role in the history of the race or because they had ended up in the
keeping of the Chosen. Even if Cormia hadn't always known what she was looking at, it had
been such a revelation. Colors. Textures. Foreign things from a foreign place.
Ironically, though, the thing she'd been most drawn to had been an ancient book. On the battered
front, in faded embossed letters, it had read: DARIUS SON OF MARKLON.
Cormia frowned and realized she'd seen that name before… in the Black Dagger Brotherhood
room in the library.
A diary of a Brother. So that was why it had been preserved.
As she stared at the locked doors, she wished she had been around in the olden days, when the
building had been kept open and one could go inside as freely as one could enter the library. But
that had been before the attack.
The attack had changed everything. It seemed inconceivable that rogue members of the race had
come over from the far side bearing weapons and looking to loot. But they had entered through a
portal that was now closed and had rushed the Treasury. The previous Primale had died
protecting his females, besting the three civilians but dying thereafter.
She supposed he'd been her father, hadn't he.
After that horrible interlude, the Scribe Virgin had closed that portal of entry and routed through
her private courtyard all who sought to come. And as a precaution, the Treasury had always been
locked, except for when the jewels were needed for the Scribe Virgin's sequester or for certain
ceremonies. The Directrix held the key.
She heard a shuffling and looked toward a colonnaded walkway. A fully draped figure limped
along, one leg dragging behind a black robe, covered hands holding a stack of towelings.
Cormia looked away quickly and hurried along, wanting both distance from that particular
female as well as the Primale's Temple. She ended up as far away from both as one could go, all
the way at the reflection pool.
The water was clear and perfectly still, a mirror that showed the sky. She wanted to put her foot
in, but that was not allowed-
Her ears picked up on something.
At first she wasn't sure what she heard, if anything at all. There was no one nearby that she could
see, nothing but the Tomb of the Youngs and the white-treed woods that marked the edged of the
sanctuary. She waited. When the sound did not come again, she dismissed it as her imagination
and continued on.
Though she was afeared, she was drawn toward the tomb where infants who did not survive birth
were enshrined.
Anxiety rode up her spine. This was the one place she never visited, and it was the same for rest
of the Chosen. All avoided this solitary square building with its white fencing. Sorrow hung
'round therein, sure as the black satin ribbons that were tied upon the door's handles.
Dear Virgin in the Fade, she thought, her destiny would soon be entombed here, as even Chosen
had a high rate of infant deaths. Verily, parts of her would rest here, little chips of her being
deposited until there was nothing but a husk left. The fact that she could not choose the
pregnancies, that no was not a word or even a thought she was permitted, that her offspring were
trapped in the same role she was made her visualize herself inside this solitary tomb, locked
among the littlest dead.
She pulled the lapels of her robe closer to her neck and shivered as she stared through the gates.
Before now, she had